ISLAMABAD: The break-up of Pakistan’s ruling coalition appeared imminent after the second-largest party in the alliance yesterday abstained from drafting a parliamentary resolution for the reinstatement of judges sacked by former President Pervez Musharraf.
The marked decision came as former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his top aides consulted about their future course after the ruling Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) put the restoration issue on the back burner by focusing on the presidential election scheduled for Sept. 6.
Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) has been pressing for immediate restoration of the judges, including deposed chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, as agreed upon with the PPP, and set today as the cut-off date for the purpose. But hours after Sharif’s revision of the deadline, the PPP put forward the name of its chief, Asif Ali Zardari, as the party’s candidate for the presidency and said all the contentious issues would be settled after the presidential elections.
“The meeting to draft the resolution is now irrelevant. Zardari has indirectly conveyed to the PML-N that he is not bound to stand by the agreements reached earlier,” said Siddiqul Farooq, a spokesman for Sharif.
The PML-N is expected to announce its final decision about its support for the five-month-old coalition today evening after meetings of the party’s top decision-making committees.
Zardari on Saturday told the BBC’s Urdu service “the agreements are not holy scripture that cannot be amended in the wake of a fast-changing situation.”
Maulana Fazlur Rehman, a minor coalition partner, who earlier this week mediated between Zardari and Sharif to save the coalition from collapse, said yesterday the issue of judges was being “unnecessarily blown up” by the PML-N.
Analysts say the prospect of the ruling coalition’s collapse loomed large as Zardari was reluctant to restore Chaudhry amid fears that he would again take up challenges to a controversial law under which the PPP leader was acquitted of numerous graft charges.